Six Steps to Remarkable Service
The fastest way to increase customer loyalty is by improving the quality of customer service you deliver..
We get a lot of advice about how to deliver great customer
service. Many of the tips are reminders of what we already know
(but we occasionally forget). And these are useful. But
sometimes, we need more than a reminder. Sometimes it's helpful
to have a system or, at least, some steps to follow.
Here is an easy yet valuable road-map I've taught in many of my
customer service seminars. It's easy to understand but it can be
effective in keeping
us on track so we consistently deliver what our customers want
from us.
1. Connect with your customer
This is critical. This is where you establish rapport and begin
a relationship with your customer. Connecting means you're
building trust that
runs both ways. Do this by engaging your customer. Start by
giving them your name and asking theirs. Be interested in them
and what they want. Ask
questions. Listen. Respond appropriately. Have a conversation
with them. Be genuine.
People know when you are genuinely interested in helping them or
not. If you are, they are more likely to respond positively to
you and to develop trust with you. If you are really not
interested, they'll sense it and you'll have a much harder time
developing the trust you need to help them.
2. Discover what they want
If you have a genuine conversation with your customer, you will
discover what they want. They don't always know what they want.
Or they might have trouble expressing it. Often people know what
they want but they're unsure how to get it. That's where you
come in.
By asking pertinent questions and paying attention to the
answers, you can discover a lot about your customer. You can
help guide them to getting what they want. That's the role you
fill and that's how you keep customers coming back.
3. Know what you can do
We can't always give the customer everything they want.
Sometimes they want what we can't do. Other times, it's
something we choose not to do.
Every business has a niche to fill. That means doing what the
business is best at doing for the customers it can serve best.
This step is about
"picking your battles". It's about choosing the customers who
best fit what you can do well by knowing what you do best.
4. Do it
This sounds easy and maybe it should be. But it's where many
businesses fail. They fail because they don't manage the process
of planning, doing,
measuring and monitoring well.
To execute well you need to be able to measure what's important.
What gets measured gets done. So, convert your customer's wants
into actions you can measure. Then setup a system to measure the
outcomes and the actions that produce them.
5. Follow-up
For customers, this is icing on their cake. It's true for you
too because it's easy to do yet it pays huge dividends in
customer loyalty.
As you plan your execution phase, make sure you plan a follow-up
contact.
Follow-up by phone, email, letter, visit, whatever works. The
more direct and personal the better but make it work for your
customer and your company. This thrills customers because very
few companies do it consistently.
6. Thank them
This often gets forgotten. Or it gets treated lightly. Too often
when I hear a "thanks for doing business with us" it sounds
phony, forced or robotic.
People often say it out of habit but they put no feeling or
authenticity into it.
So, when you thank your customers, be real about it. Make it
genuine. Thank them in multiple ways, not just once. make sure
they know you are grateful for their business.
Follow these six steps with every customer and you'll find your
level of customer service will increase dramatically. Coach your
employees to
understand and work through these steps (every time) and you'll
see your customer loyalty and customer retention go through the
roof.
About the Author
Kevin Stirtz helps companies increase customer loyalty by improving customer service. He has written several books, he is a professional speaker and he is the president of http://stirtzgroup.com.

